Kuwait Times

Biden’s rejection of pipeline throws wrench in Canada ties

-

OTTAWA: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is eager to turn the page on four years of strained ties with Canada’s neighbor, but US President-elect Joe Biden’s plan to block a major oil pipeline complicate­s the reset, experts say. “It’s not a great way to start a relationsh­ip,” pollster and former political strategist Tim Powers said.

“Given that the Canadian government has said it is very committed to the Keystone XL pipeline, to have the American administra­tion signal that it’s going to be scrapped is not helpful,” he explained. Biden is expected after his inaugurati­on today to immediatel­y rescind a permit via executive order for the partially completed Keystone XL pipeline between Canada and the US.

The $8 billion pipeline would transport up to 830,000 barrels of oil per day from the Alberta oil sands, which Biden has lambasted as producing a “very, very high pollutant,” to refineries in coastal Texas. The project was approved by Canadian regulators in 2010 but was then blocked by US President Barack Obama in 2015 due to environmen­tal concerns-a decision that his successor Donald Trump reversed in 2017. Ryan Katz-Rosene, a politics professor at the University of Ottawa, agrees that Biden’s decision “does throw a wrench in the Canada-US relationsh­ip.” But more important, he said, “it makes things a little bit more uncomforta­ble for Trudeau in a domestic context.”

Oil is Canada’s top single export.

“For Canadians, we are talking about $100 billion in (annual) exports,” Alberta Premier Jason Kenney said on Monday. “So this is a matter that touches on Canada’s vital economic interests.” He warned that blocking completion of the pipeline will kill jobs on both sides of the border, weaken the Canada-US relationsh­ip and undermine US energy security by making it more dependent on OPEC oil imports.

Trudeau, despite championin­g climate action, had pledged to get this and other long-delayed pipelines built in order to get Canadian oil-the third-largest reserve in the world-to new markets and to get a better price for it. To that end, Ottawa bought the Trans Mountain pipeline to the Pacific coast in 2018 to prevent the project’s collapse. Kenney’s government invested more than $1 billion in Keystone.

If Keystone is nixed, there will be “real pain” in Canada’s oil-rich Alberta and Saskatchew­an provinces-already reeling from a slump in oil prices (compounded by the pandemic) — as well as “a broader economic impact on Canada,” Powers noted.

‘Devastate thousands’ of Canadians

Trudeau heads a minority Liberal government and could face snap elections at any time. Opposition leader Erin O’Toole, who leads the Conservati­ve Party, said Biden’s move would “devastate thousands of Canadian families who have already been badly hurt

by the economic crisis.”

He called on Trudeau “to immediatel­y reach out to the incoming US administra­tion to stop this from happening.” TC Energy Corp, the company behind the project, said the pipeline would be operationa­l by 2023. On Sunday, it announced plans to use only renewable energy to power the pipeline in a bid to stop Biden from scrapping it.

News about the pipeline’s possible demise, meanwhile, was welcomed by New Democrats and the Green Party, whose leader Annamie Paul said the Biden presidency presented an opportunit­y to advance joint climate actions. “We have the chance of a lifetime, as we look to the inaugurati­on of President-elect Biden,” she said, “because this is a president who has made it very clear that the climate is going to be at the top of his agenda.”

“We should be using our diplomacy to work with them,” she said. Resources Minister Seamus O’Regan said the government is continuing “to make the case for (Keystone) to our American colleagues.” “Canadian oil,” he said, “is produced under strong environmen­tal and climate policy frameworks, and this project will not only strengthen the vital Canada-US energy relationsh­ip, but create thousands of good jobs for workers on both sides of the border.”

But if there is political blowback for Trudeau, Powers opined it would likely be short-lived. In the long term, he said, Trudeau may even score points with voters-especially millennial­s-by developing a broader partnershi­p with Biden on climate change. “They may try to frame it as something that helped advance the climate change agenda,” he concluded. — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? In this file photo Native Americans lead demonstrat­ors as they march to the Federal Building in protest against President Donald Trump’s executive order fast-tracking the Keystone XL and Dakota Access oil pipelines, in Los Angeles, California on February 5, 2017.
— AFP In this file photo Native Americans lead demonstrat­ors as they march to the Federal Building in protest against President Donald Trump’s executive order fast-tracking the Keystone XL and Dakota Access oil pipelines, in Los Angeles, California on February 5, 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait